News, 29 May 2002
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has criticised the United
Kingdom for making little progress in combating teenage pregnancy. A
UNICEF survey has found that the UK's teenage pregnancy rate is second
only to that of the United States. A UNICEF report claims that
significant reasons for Britain's high teenage pregnancy rate include
inadequate sex education and the fact that "contraceptive advice and
services" are only available "in a closed atmosphere of embarrassment
and secrecy". [
BBC News online, 29 May]
A spokesman for SPUC pointed out that UNICEF had a record of promoting
abortion and abortifacient "contraceptive services" around the world,
and rejected UNICEF's analysis of the reasons for Britain's high
teenage pregnancy rate. An intensive sex education programme in British
schools over the past 20 years and incentive payments to doctors for
contraceptive advice have had no measurable impact in reducing the
teenage pregnancy figures.
Members of the European parliament's Commission for the Rights of
Women and Equality of Opportunities will vote on a pro-abortion report
on Monday (3 June). The report on sexual and reproductive rights has
been written by Ms Anne E M Van Lancker, a Socialist member of the
European parliament from Belgium. It begins by affirming that women
have fundamental sexual and reproductive rights which require special
protection, and then proposes that all European Union member states and
candidate countries should ensure that abortion is legal, accessible
and free to all women. It also proposes that sex education and access
to contraception, including so-called emergency contraception, should
be made available to adolescents without the knowledge of their
parents. [
Euro-Fam, 29 May]
The cloning expert who directed a project in California aimed at creating human clones for research purposes [see
news digest for 27 May]
has been challenged to explain why he has relocated to Britain.
Josephine Quintavalle, director of Comment on Reproductive Ethics,
wants to know why Dr Roger Pedersen has moved from the University of
California, San Francisco, to Cambridge University, England. She asked:
"Is it because of the looser laws over here? I also want to know to
what extent officials know what is actually going on in these research
institutions." [
CNSNews, 28 May]
The UK is the only country whose parliament has voted to authorise the
creation and destruction of cloned human embryos for research purposes.
It has emerged that Nancy Crick, the 69-year-old Australian
euthanasia advocate who committed suicide last week, knew that doctors
no longer believed she had bowel cancer at the time of her death. It
had been reported that Mrs Crick was dying of cancer but Dr Philip
Nitschke, the prominent pro-euthanasia campaigner, revealed this
morning that Mrs Crick had been told repeatedly by doctors that she was
no longer terminally ill months before she killed herself. [
Sydney Morning Herald, 29 May]
A woman has been arrested in Colorado accused of illegally selling
abortion-inducing drugs by mail order. Ms Lishan He, 46, was charged by
police in Denver last week with distributing abortifacients and
practising medicine without a licence. Police were alerted to the
operation last year by a flier. When they responded to it, enclosing a
money order, they received drugs similar to RU-486 10 days later by
express mail. It is unknown how many doses had been sold already. [
Denver Post, 24 May]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012